MetLife Stadium Guide:
Giants, Jets, Seating, Parking & Game Day Tips
The practical guide to New York’s football stadium — both teams, how to get there, where to sit, and how to plan a full game day from Manhattan.
MetLife Stadium is where New York football lives — even though the stadium itself sits across the Hudson in East Rutherford, New Jersey. That small geographic twist changes almost everything about the day. A Giants or Jets game can be a huge, memorable NFL experience near NYC, but it works best when you plan it like a full gameday, not a quick stop between Midtown attractions.
At roughly 82,500 seats, MetLife is one of the largest stadiums in the NFL. It is the only stadium in the country shared by two NFL teams. The experience of being there — the scale, the tailgate culture, the crowd noise when a game is on the line, the cold November wind cutting across the Meadowlands — is genuinely different from any other sports venue in the New York area. It requires a little more logistical honesty than most venues, and it rewards it.
This guide covers where MetLife is and why that matters, how to choose between a Giants and Jets game, how to think about seats, how to get there from Manhattan, what parking and tailgating involve, and what first-timers consistently get wrong. The seating detail lives in the dedicated MetLife Stadium seating guide.

Aerial view of MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey — the shared football home of the New York Giants and New York Jets.
Where MetLife Stadium Is — and Why It Matters
MetLife Stadium is in East Rutherford, New Jersey, approximately 8 miles from Midtown Manhattan as the crow flies. The teams are New York teams, the branding is New York football, and the fan base comes almost entirely from New York and New Jersey. But the stadium is not in any of the five boroughs, and it is not on the NYC subway system.
For most NYC sports venues, you can walk out of your hotel, take the subway, and be there in 20–30 minutes. MetLife requires a different approach. Getting there by public transit typically means NJ Transit from Penn Station with a connection at Secaucus Junction to Meadowlands Rail service when it operates for game days. Driving means crossing the Hudson and planning parking in advance. Rideshare works but can be slow and expensive for the postgame exit when thousands of people are trying to leave simultaneously.
The biggest MetLife mistake is treating it like a Manhattan venue. It is close on a map — but the game-day rhythm is completely different from MSG, Yankee Stadium, Barclays Center, or Citi Field. A MetLife game day is a half-day to full-day commitment. Visitors who plan around that have a great time. Visitors who expect a two-hour sports stop have a stressful one.
MetLife vs Other NYC Sports Venues
Giants vs Jets — Two Different Football Days at the Same Stadium
MetLife Stadium changes depending on which team is home. The building is shared, the parking lots are the same, and the transit to get there is identical. But the fan energy, the team branding, the opponent mix, the ticket market, and the emotional texture of the day are genuinely different between a Giants game and a Jets game.
Giants at MetLife
NFC East · Traditional Brand- Safer tourist default — more nationally recognized
- Classic NFC East rivalries (Cowboys, Eagles, Washington)
- More traditional New York NFL feel
- Good for casual fans who recognize the brand
- Strong for tourists who want the “classic New York football” experience
Jets at MetLife
AFC East · Value Upside- Often better secondary market value depending on matchup
- AFC East rivalries — louder, more volatile crowd energy
- More emotionally reactive fan base — higher highs and lows
- Strong when divisional stakes are real
- Worth comparing schedule-to-schedule against Giants dates
For most visitors, the right question is not simply Giants or Jets. It is which home game gives you the better combination of kickoff time, opponent, seat value, weather, and travel plan. The full comparison is in the Giants vs Jets guide.
Best Types of Games to See at MetLife Stadium
Sunday Afternoon
Easiest logistics, manageable weather in early season, enough time to return to Manhattan for dinner. The default recommendation for most visitors.
September – October
Conditions are manageable, crowds are strong, and the stakes are real enough to feel like genuine NFL football. The tourist-friendly time window.
Rivalry / Divisional
Giants vs Cowboys or Eagles. Jets vs Bills or Patriots. The crowd energy lifts from the parking lots through the final whistle. Higher prices but a different experience.
Late-Season Meaningful
When playoff stakes are real in November or December, MetLife can be genuinely electric. Cold weather is certain. Not the tourist-friendly pick — the right football pick.
Prime Time
Thursday night, Sunday night, and Monday night games are the biggest television events. Hardest postgame logistics. Not for first-timers without a plan.
Preseason
Lowest ticket prices, lightest crowds, least-competitive football. Good for seeing MetLife cheaply. Starters typically play limited snaps.
MetLife Stadium Seating — Overview
MetLife is a large stadium and seat location makes a significant difference to the experience. The main seat zones from best overall view to most affordable break down roughly as follows.
Lower sidelines — best classic NFL view, highest price. Midfield lower seats are the premium option and worth it for a marquee game or special occasion. Lower corners and end zones — more atmosphere and better value, but less balanced sightline for following the full game. Mezzanine and club-style — better comfort, often strong sightlines, usually higher price than standard upper. Upper sidelines midfield — the best budget play at MetLife. Centered between the 20s, the view of the field is complete and often better for reading the game than a lower corner or end zone. Upper corners and end zones — cheapest seats in the building, least ideal for first-timers who want to follow the game.
Section by section, row considerations, weather exposure by area, and which zones work best for tourists, families, and date nights — all of that is in the dedicated MetLife Stadium seating guide. Use it before you buy tickets.
MetLife Stadium Tickets — How to Think About Value
Ticket prices at MetLife vary by team, opponent, kickoff time, month, team performance, and seat location. The cheapest listing on a given date is not always the right ticket. Section placement, weather exposure, and sightlines matter significantly at a stadium this large.
For visitors with fixed travel dates, the most useful approach is comparing both the Giants and Jets home schedules side by side for the weekends you will be in the city. Secondary market prices often signal which game has more demand, which can help identify both the more exciting game and the better value game — they are not always the same.
Afternoon kickoff, September or October, against a strong opponent — that combination produces the most tourist-friendly MetLife game regardless of team. It is also usually not the cheapest game. Families and visitors with limited experience at NFL games should prioritize kickoff time and seat clarity over lowest face value. For timing strategy, the when to buy football tickets guide covers the full picture.
How to Get to MetLife Stadium from NYC
MetLife Stadium is not on the NYC subway and is not in any of the five boroughs. For visitors staying in Manhattan, getting there requires a deliberate transit plan made before the day of the game — not a last-minute decision at Penn Station.
NJ Transit — Standard Public Transit Route
For most Manhattan-based visitors, the cleanest approach is NJ Transit from Penn Station to Secaucus Junction, then Meadowlands Rail service to the stadium when event trains are operating. This avoids parking logistics entirely and keeps the experience simple. The critical step is checking the specific game-day service schedule at njtransit.com before departure — standard commuter routes do not reflect event-specific train service, and the connection at Secaucus requires coordination.
Driving
Driving gives you access to the tailgate culture and eliminates the transit transfer. It requires advance parking planning — NFL gameday parking at MetLife is managed and typically requires permits purchased before game day. Route planning through the Lincoln Tunnel or approaches from Route 3 should account for significant game-day traffic volume in both directions.
Rideshare
Rideshare is a viable arrival option but the postgame exit is where it becomes unreliable. When 80,000 people exit the stadium simultaneously and a large percentage attempts to request rideshare at once, surge pricing, driver availability, and wait times can add significant time and cost to the return trip. Always have a backup plan that does not depend on rideshare being immediately available.
The full transit breakdown — train schedules, driving routes, parking, rideshare logistics, and postgame exit strategy — is in the how to get to MetLife Stadium guide.
Parking at MetLife Stadium
NFL gameday parking at MetLife is not something to improvise. The lots serve tens of thousands of vehicles and parking is typically managed through advance permit purchases rather than walk-up entry. For high-demand games, showing up at the lots without a plan can result in being turned away or paying significantly inflated prices from lot operators outside the official complex.
For visitors planning to drive, the parking plan should be sorted at the same time as the tickets — not the morning of the game. Arrival timing also matters: the lots open hours before kickoff and the experience of arriving two hours early versus 30 minutes before kickoff is completely different, both in terms of parking efficiency and the opportunity to tailgate.
Full parking logistics, lot information, arrival timing, and advance booking guidance are in the parking near MetLife Stadium guide.
Tailgating at MetLife Stadium
The MetLife tailgate is a genuine part of the football day — one of the features that separates a stadium this size from the compact city arenas. The lots fill early, the grills and speakers come out hours before kickoff, and the pregame scene in the parking areas is its own event with its own energy. For visitors who want the full NFL culture experience, arriving two to three hours before kickoff with a car, a group, and a plan is one of the most distinctly football things you can do near New York.
That said, tailgating is completely optional. Tourists using transit, families with young children, or anyone who wants a simpler day can skip the lots entirely and still have a full game-day experience inside the stadium.
- You are driving with a car and parking plan
- You have a group to share the experience with
- You want the full NFL gameday culture
- You are comfortable arriving early
- Weather is reasonable
- You are using NJ Transit
- You are traveling with young kids
- Weather is rough or late-season cold
- You want the simplest tourist day
- Your priority is the game, not the scene
Tailgate rules — permitted items, lot assignments, coolers, grills, alcohol policies — change and must be verified from current MetLife Stadium sources before planning. Do not assume last season’s rules apply.
Food, Restaurants, and Hotels Around MetLife
MetLife Stadium is not surrounded by a dense walkable restaurant district. The Meadowlands area is a suburban sports complex — functional for the stadium, not a dining destination. The approach to food planning here is different from what works near MSG, Broadway, Barclays Center, or Yankee Stadium.
For most visitors, the right approach is eating in Manhattan before departing for the game, eating casually inside the stadium during the game, and returning to the city for dinner after. That structure avoids the area’s dining limitations entirely and keeps the game as the centerpiece of the day.
For visitors who need to stay near the stadium — because of tailgating plans, an early/late game, or a travel schedule that starts or ends at MetLife — the Secaucus and Meadowlands hotel cluster provides practical options close to NJ Transit connections and stadium access. The MetLife Stadium area guide covers what the neighborhood is actually like. For dining options that work in the area, see restaurants near MetLife Stadium. For hotel options, see hotels near MetLife Stadium.
Weather and What to Wear
MetLife is an open-air stadium. Weather is not a background detail at a football game — it is a central planning factor, particularly for anyone attending in October, November, or later. The NFL season runs into January and the Meadowlands has no roof and no shelter from wind.
September games are generally comfortable. October can be beautiful or genuinely cool depending on the week. November games should be planned with real cold-weather gear in mind. December and January games are cold — sometimes bitterly so — and the wind across the Meadowlands can make the temperature feel significantly lower than the forecast. Choosing an upper end-zone seat for a December night game in a light jacket is a miserable experience that a little planning prevents.
The full clothing and gear guidance is in the what to wear to a New York football game guide. The short version: layers, comfortable shoes, a compliant bag within MetLife’s current clear bag policy, and a realistic assessment of how cold it actually is.
First Time at MetLife Stadium
Most first-time MetLife problems are planning problems rather than in-stadium problems. The venue itself runs smoothly for a stadium of this scale. Here is what consistently catches first-timers off guard.
- Assuming MetLife is in NYC. It is in New Jersey. NJ Transit, driving, or rideshare — plan the route before you buy tickets.
- Treating it like MSG. MetLife is a large suburban NFL venue. The logistics, scale, and timing are completely different from an arena sports night in Manhattan.
- Booking dinner too soon after the game. Postgame exit from MetLife — by train or car — adds real time to the day. 90 minutes minimum after the final whistle before expecting to be back in Midtown.
- Choosing cheapest seats without checking sightlines. An upper end-zone seat far from midfield is a genuinely poor viewing experience for a first-time NFL visitor. Section placement matters.
- Ignoring weather. Open-air stadium. Wind at MetLife can make cold days feel significantly colder. Plan clothing for the actual conditions, not the comfortable forecast.
- Bringing the wrong bag. MetLife has a clear bag policy. Check it at metlifestadium.com before you pack. No exceptions are made at the gate.
- Relying on rideshare for the postgame exit. It works, but it is slow and expensive when everyone leaves at once. Have a transit backup.
- Not checking event-specific transit. Standard NJ Transit route information does not reflect game-day Meadowlands service. Check njtransit.com for your specific game date.
- Trying to do too much on the same day. MetLife is a half-day to full-day commitment. Fitting it between two other major NYC activities rarely works.
The full first-timer breakdown is in the first time at MetLife Stadium guide.
MetLife Stadium for Tourists, Families, and Date Nights
For Tourists
Great for visitors who want NFL scale — but only with enough time and a real transportation plan. Sunday afternoon in September or October is the formula that works for most visitors.
Tourist Guide →For Families
Best with afternoon kickoff, mild weather, seats with clear field views, and no tight evening plans after. Avoid late-night cold-weather games with younger kids.
Family Guide →For Date Night
Works best for couples who genuinely enjoy football energy, crowds, and a full-day sports outing. Less polished than Broadway or a restaurant evening — more memorable when planned well.
Date Night Guide →Suggested MetLife Game Day Plans
Tourist-Friendly Sunday Football Game
- Breakfast or lunch in Midtown — something relaxed with no time pressure
- NJ Transit from Penn Station — verify game-day Meadowlands service in advance
- Arrive 60–75 minutes before kickoff — take in the stadium environment
- Game — full NFL experience, Sunday afternoon
- Patient postgame return via NJ Transit — build in buffer time
- Simple Manhattan dinner with no specific reservation time
Full Tailgate Football Day
- Drive from Manhattan — parking permit secured well in advance
- Arrive 2–3 hours before kickoff for the full tailgate experience
- Tailgate — bring or buy supplies, join the lot atmosphere
- Game — seats chosen for both view and atmosphere
- Relaxed postgame — wait in the stadium plaza before heading to the lots
- Late dinner on the way back or in Manhattan
Family MetLife Game
- Choose an afternoon kickoff in September or October
- Early lunch before leaving — avoid expensive stadium food as the main meal
- Clear transit or parking plan confirmed before the day starts
- Arrive 60 minutes early — time for kids to get oriented without a long wait
- Halftime snack plan identified in advance — know where you are going
- Leave near the final whistle if energy is fading — no tight evening plans
Frequently Asked Questions
MetLife Stadium is in East Rutherford, New Jersey — approximately 8 miles from Midtown Manhattan. It is not in New York City and is not accessible by NYC subway. Getting there from Manhattan requires NJ Transit from Penn Station, a car, or rideshare.
No. Despite the New York team names, MetLife Stadium is in New Jersey. This is the single most important logistical fact for visitors. Plan your transit before buying tickets, not after.
The New York Giants (NFC East) and the New York Jets (AFC East) both play their home games at MetLife Stadium. It is the only NFL stadium shared by two teams.
The standard public transit approach is NJ Transit from Penn Station with a transfer at Secaucus Junction to game-day Meadowlands Rail service. Verify the specific service at njtransit.com for your game date. Driving and rideshare are also options — each has specific logistics worth checking before the day. Full details in the how to get to MetLife Stadium guide.
It depends on what you want from the day. Transit is the simpler tourist choice — no parking logistics, no driving. Driving is better if tailgating is the goal or if you are coming from outside Manhattan. Both require advance planning. If driving, confirm parking availability at metlifestadium.com before game day.
Yes — tailgating is a central part of the MetLife game-day experience. The lots open hours before kickoff and the tailgate scene is a genuine draw for football fans. Rules on items, grills, coolers, and alcohol should be verified at metlifestadium.com before planning, as policies can change.
For first-timers, lower or mezzanine sideline sections between the 20-yard lines offer the best classic view. For value, centered upper sideline sections give a complete field view at a lower price. End-zone sections offer atmosphere and lower prices but less balanced sightlines. Full breakdown in the MetLife Stadium seating guide.
Yes — when planned correctly. A Sunday afternoon game in September or October with a strong opponent is a genuine NFL experience worth traveling for. The key is treating it as a full gameday, not a quick side activity. Visitors who plan transportation, seats, and timing in advance consistently have a better experience than those who do not.
Compare both home schedules for your specific dates in the city. The Giants carry the more traditional national brand and are the safer tourist default. The Jets can offer better secondary market value depending on the matchup and may have a louder, more emotionally reactive crowd for certain games. Both are at the same stadium with identical logistics. See the Giants vs Jets comparison for the full breakdown.
For most visitors, 60 to 75 minutes before kickoff gives enough time for entry, finding seats, and getting settled without an extended wait. If you want to take in the full stadium environment, 90 minutes works well. Tailgaters should plan for two to three hours before kickoff.
MetLife Stadium has a clear bag policy — only clear bags within specified size limits and small clutch purses are permitted. Check the current policy at metlifestadium.com before your game date. Policies can change and exceptions are not made at the gate.
The Final Call on MetLife Stadium
MetLife Stadium is not the easiest sports venue near NYC — but it can be one of the most complete football experiences when it is planned correctly. Choose the right Giants or Jets game, understand the seat zones, build in transportation time on both ends, dress for the weather, and treat the day like the full NFL outing it is. Do that, and MetLife becomes a strong New York football centerpiece instead of a confusing trip across the Hudson.
The scale of the place — the 80,000-seat crowd, the tailgate lots stretching to the horizon, the cold air and the stadium lights — is not something any arena in the city can replicate. It is worth doing once if you are visiting New York and care about sports. It is worth doing often if you care about football.
For the full day picture, the MetLife Stadium area guide and the how to plan a New York football game guide cover everything from where to eat to exactly how to structure the day.
Two Teams.
One Full Game Day.
Giants or Jets — once you’ve chosen, the next decisions are seating, transit, parking, and what to do before and after. These guides cover the complete MetLife picture.
Same stadium, same parking, same transit — but completely different fan energy, opponent mix, ticket markets, and what the day feels like. Here’s how to compare both home schedules for your specific dates and pick the right game.
Compare both teams → Seating Guide MetLife Stadium Seating GuideEvery section zone at MetLife — which areas deliver the best view, which are the best value, and how weather exposure changes the calculus in late season.
Full seating guide → Team Guide New York Giants GuideThe traditional New York NFL brand — tickets, seating, game types, and what the Giants day at MetLife looks like from arrival to exit.
Giants guide → Team Guide New York Jets GuideAFC rivalries, louder crowd energy, potential value upside — the Jets case for your MetLife game day and how to find the right matchup.
Jets guide → Visitor Guide Best NYC Football Game for TouristsWhich team, which game type, and which timing actually delivers the best visitor experience at MetLife.
Tourist guide → Family Guide Best NYC Football Game for FamiliesKickoff time, weather window, seat access — what makes a MetLife game work for kids without making the day a logistics battle.
Family guide → Date Night Best NYC Football Game for Date NightHow to pick the right game, the right seats, and structure the full day so a MetLife football date actually holds up end to end.
Date night guide → Full Plan How to Plan a New York Football GameThe complete day-of breakdown — when to leave, how transit works, how to handle the postgame exit, and what a smooth MetLife day looks like.
Full plan →